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FM
Former Member

The President’s timely charge to the GDF

 

Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, President Donald Ramotar, has adjured the Guyana Defence Force (GDF) to act professionally, especially in light of the pending General and Regional Elections on May 11 of this year.The President, in delivering the Charge at the Guyana Defence Force’s annual conference at the Officers’ Complex at Camp Ayangana, stressed the imperative of ranks eschewing political affiliation for professional conduct in order to prevent and forestall any violence that may erupt upon elections, stating “… my fervent hope is that the climate is one of peace where good sense will prevail, even as contesting political parties and their supporters, as is their democratic right, vigorously conduct their campaign.” He warned “… forces of reaction and fragmentation must not be allowed to fester in our society.

“Any attempt to create a feeling of insecurity and fear among our citizens or in any segment of our population, based on rumour, subjective gutter politics or worse, must be publicly frowned upon and action taken by the security forces to arrest any such tendency.”
The President was not issuing such warnings in a vacuum, because almost every election in Guyana has been marred by eruptions of violence that ensued in much distress and destruction in the nation.
The overt and covert threats, in and out of Parliament, and the veiled instigation to violence of supporters by leading members of the Opposition, as well as some rabid anti-Government columnists, professional protesters and reporters, are engendering great fear in communities that have traditionally been victims of the Opposition’s rhetoric and actions.
The reason that President Donald Ramotar was forced into opting for his last recourse to safeguard the nation from the fallout of an abrupt dissolution and issue a proclamation of prorogation, ironically meant to guard the bastion of democracy – Guyana’s National Assembly – was because the joint Opposition’s actions would have left no room for negotiations, as Parliament would have been dissolved with immediacy through their no-confidence strategy to depose the Government. The President’s proclamation, through rights vested in him by Article 7:1 of Guyana’s Constitution, has given the nation a window of many opportunities – not least for continuity in development.
However, the very real fear that the Opposition’s actions and utterances would devolve into violence is an extant reality of an ongoing cycle that has its genesis in the infamous x-13 Plan, allegedly crafted by Hamilton Green and Forbes Burnham, with support from external forces; and continuing throughout Guyana’s history in various guises.
Approximately eight years ago, during the height of the “Buxton Resistance” and the PNC “Slo’ Fiah, Mo’ Fiah” campaign, four GuySuco workers were kidnapped and murdered aback of Buxton; sleeping babies from an adjoining community were slain, along with their parents and older siblings; a sitting minister of Government was gunned down in his home, together with his siblings and security guard; people having a recreational drink at a bar were gunned down; businessmen were scythed down like so much chaff, while entire blocks of business entities were either looted or burned flat. One May morning, before dawn, Premchand Barran and his 10-yr-old son, Mervyn Barran, from Enterprise, were executed in the backdam where they went to catch shrimp. Not far from them, Mr. Dhanpaul Jagdeo, from Non Pareil, was found. Each was executed. One policeman who persevered in investigating the murders, police detective Harry Kooseran, was gunned down. The PPP adjured its supporters not to retaliate, so the Opposition’s plan to ignite a race war was averted, but the pressure continued.
The list of atrocities was endless and spiralling out of the control of the governmental construct.
The security sector heads, as evidence showed through tape-recordings and other subsequent revelations, were complicit in these criminal and murderous forays by one section of the Guyanese community against the other.
During that period in time, the inflammatory Opposition’s rhetoric and actions reached to the extent where they labelled murderous thieves and rapists as freedom fighters and even draped the body of the notorious Lindon “Blackie” London with the Golden Arrowhead – giving him hero status. This action was never condemned by the Guyana Human Rights Association and the Opposition collective of ‘NGOs’, including the PNC/APNU/WPA women’s arm – Red Thread, which has much clout with the foreign ambassadorial delegates through intermingling on the cocktail route.
The police ranks were helpless to intervene in the wanton slaughter and destruction countrywide, because they too came under fire, being gunned down on the streets as they performed their duties, or even while they performed personal tasks during their off-duty periods.
This period of several dark and tragic times of Guyana was precipitated by ruthless power-hungry opportunistic politicians who do not care if they ‘bruk up’ the country in their relentless bid for power; and the communities through which they directed their murderous campaigns were their own strongholds, which were destroyed at many levels, including lost lives during Opposition-driven intermittent periods of violence and mayhem in the land.
Greenidge’s rampages against Indian and Chinese businesses eerily recall, and can be interpreted by their supporters as identifying targets for destruction, the calls by the youth arm of APNU for the boycott of Indian-run businesses, as well as businesses of African Guyanese who eschew race politics to work on developmental projects driven by Government, the pillorying of African leaders in Government whom they call “houseboys”, even against bureaucratic technocrats merely doing a job within the Government construct, and the racist rhetoric against GuySuCo workers and conscientious Guyanese of all ethnic compositions are warnings of the dire consequences of such blatant and open calls for insurrection in the nation.
Greenidge’s open threat to the life of the President, with his reference to King Charles, who was beheaded after he had dismantled Parliament, is high treason, and in any other country he would have immediately been placed behind bars.
Responsible Guyanese citizens have felt constrained to issue a timely reminder and warning of the consequences of these inflammatory racist rhetoric and actions by the joint Opposition and their satellites.
Those who lived through and experienced the horrors of those years are terrified of this trend to the incitement of violence and hatred, as exemplified by the utterances of Opposition leaders and Freddie Kissoon’s diabolical raging against sitting Ministers of Government, because of the potential for the destructive elements who could once again be unleashed upon the country.
Thus, the President’s charge and warning to GDF ranks is timely, and should be heeded by the ranks of the joint services, who should not see opportunistic, power-hungry politicians as their “kith and kin”; but make right choices for their real “kith and kin” – their children, whose future they could jeopardize if they opt to abandon their professional responsibilities and allow anarchy to prevail in the country.

Extracted from the Guyana chronicle 

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Nanda Gopaul case indicative of PPP/C breakdown of rule of law

March 14, 2011 | By | Filed Under News 

- GPP says police must work independent of Govt. masters

The handling of the motor vehicle accident involving the Permanent Secretary in the Office of the President, Dr. Nanda Gopaul, is an illustration of why there is need for change now in Guyana. This is according to the Guyana Peoples Partnership, a fledgling party keen on contesting the 2011 election. “How can we build a society where there is respect by all for the rule of law but so-called top officials in the society, who should be setting the example, engage in behaviours that are wrong in law and harmful to the society, yet get away with…turning of a blind eye by the police?” The party questions why was the Permanent Secretary in the Office of the President allowed to “drive” himself from the scene of the accident before a breathalyzer test was administered to him when it was clear to the witnesses on the scene that he had been drinking alcohol and appeared to be under the influence.

Office of the President’s Permanent Secretary Nanda Gopaul  

“Also why was he allowed to drive away from the scene of the accident before the police had completed their accident investigation: measurement, statements from the parties involved. Is this going to be the new protocol for all motor vehicle accidents in Guyana?” The Permanent Secretary of the Office of the President has agreed to pay for a replacement vehicle for the one he destroyed and to pay an additional sum as compensation to the victims of this vehicular collision. According to the party, “Some may say that that closes this matter…However, is there not a charge of driving under the influence to be laid on the Permanent Secretary in the Office of the President?” The party also questions if this is the new protocol in Guyana where the police are not going to be laying charges against drivers for driving under the influence, “in spite of all the hype surrounding the introduction of breathalyzer testing in Guyana and the money spent buying testing equipment, training police personnel, and passing the necessary legislation?” The party asked, “if it was our wife, or sister, or mother would we have been so unconcerned, especially if instead of only being thrown several yards following the impact of Dr Gopaul’s vehicle and being hospitalised, we were hearing that she was dead?” The GPP called on the Police Force to do their work independently of government masters.

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Conscience:

 The rule of law must prevail.

Everyone, including the duty bearers in government, should obey the law

November 3, 2014 | By | Filed Under Letters 

Dear Editor, We are calling on all Guyanese, regardless of race, creed, status or political affiliation to respect the rule of law which is the linchpin to eradicate corruption, crime, inequality, and poverty, some of the main problems plaguing Guyana. It also constrains behavior and thereby protects citizens from arbitrary and discriminatory actions by the government. Twenty years ago Guyana was on the path to eliminate extreme poverty but this effort was derailed due to the new breed of leaders who took over the PPP at the turn of the century. Since that time, no significant progress has been made; instead, the new PPP leaders have charted a new course that has marginalized a certain ethnic group, turned a blind eye on corrupt practices and are using the state resources to enrich themselves, their relatives and friends. The rule of law is a principle that is frequently spoken about and is quintessential to the promotion of democracy, freedoms and economic growth, hence the development of Guyana. It has generally been accepted as a principle of good governance and accountability, whereby no one is above the law, which is accessible and should be equally applicable to all, inclusive of the duty bearers of the state.  Yet, ironically, it has been ignored by many in the PPP hierarchy, labeled the untouchables at Freedom House who the police are afraid to charge, irrespective of the crimes committed by them. The most recent case is the alleged threats issued by the Attorney General (AG) on the owner Glenn Lall and staff of Kaieteur News. It was reported in the press that a senior police officer has stated that the AG is a “BIG ONE and we can’t touch him.” Instead, we were informed that the Police Force is trying to lay charges on the reporter for illegally taping the AG. If this is true, then it is very unfortunate that we have a very scared, bias, unsound and unprofessional Police Force, which by itself is not adhering to the rule of law either. It is a known fact that if an ordinary citizen had threatened any minister of the government, he would have been arrested immediately and charged with the worst crime even without a recording. Over the years, the Police Force has not even respected their motto, which is to serve and protect, instead they have violated the civil rights of the poor and vulnerable in the most barbaric way. No one, not even the AG should be above the law, and as the Chief-law enforcing officer, he should set the right example. So the mere fact that the Force is making these claims that Glenn Lall cannot be reached to clarify his statement, is dishonest. The fact that they are accusing the reporter of falsely taping the Attorney General is reason to believe that they are indeed afraid to charge the AG because he is a “BIG ONE.” And they will give some BOGUS reasons for their fake actions. The public has known for a very long time that Guyana does not have a POLICE FORCE but a POLICE FARCE which is very dishonest, unprofessional, corrupt and afraid of the PPP regime. Unlike the PPP, we believe that promoting and obeying the rule of law should result in a more just society, the building of a culture, and the acknowledgement of freedom and respect for the rights of individuals. Likewise, obeying and respecting the rule of law should be one of the fundamental policies of the PPP, but the untouchables at Freedom believe that they are above the law and that it should only apply to the poor masses and not to them. We also believe that embracing the rule of law should be the primary objective of the regime because it is a major source for sustainable economic and human development. It guarantees accountability, predictability and transparency in governance. Thus, adherence to these principles protects business, creates confidence, attracts investments and ensures respect for and enforcement of property rights and freedoms as guaranteed by the Constitution. Obeying and respecting the rule of law and with zero tolerance for corruption and crime is crucial for the government to promote a business-friendly economy to achieve economic growth and sustainable development in Guyana. Thus the citizens should demand that their “duty-bearers” in the government, including the Attorney General and his colleagues, respect and obey the laws of the land. Asquith Rose and Harish Singh

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Conscience:

 The rule of law must prevail.

A perfect storm – the radio broacast licences

By Dr Arif Bulkan

Dr. Arif Bulkan teaches constitutional law and Caribbean human rights law at the St. Augustine campus of the University of the West Indies

The forced disclosure of the Prime Minister that on the eve of demitting office in November 2011, former President Jagdeo issued ten radio broadcast licences in his discretion, brings to mind the concept of a ‘perfect storm’. This refers to a natural phenomenon whereby a series of aggravating circumstances combine to produce one monster event. Jagdeo’s decision to issue those licences was a perfect storm of lawlessness, for it embodied simultaneously a series of unconstitutional and otherwise unlawful acts, all of which are integral aspects of PPP-style governance. These include their intolerance of criticism, their serial disregard for the law, the nepotism that overshadows employment decisions and government spending, and a shameless policy of racial discrimination targeted at the country’s Afro-descendants. Issuing those licences must have been among the last of Jagdeo’s official acts, and it was wholly in keeping with a tenure that caused Nadira Jagan to lament, shortly after Jagdeo left office, that her parents must be turning in their graves.

20130415diasporaThe history of broadcast licensing in Guyana, culminating in Jagdeo’s secret awards to a chosen few, is a prime example of the PPP’s totalitarian disregard for fundamental rights and democracy. For almost two decades they maintained a monopoly of the airwaves, only permitting state-owned stations to broadcast. Applications for licences were simply ignored, and in 2009 Valmikki Singh, Head of the National Frequency Management Unit, revealed in court that there were 60 pending applications. Refusing or ignoring applications for licences to broadcast has consistently been held by courts in the commonwealth, including our own Court of Appeal, to amount to a violation of the right to free expression. Worse, when Jagdeo chose to act in November 2011, the majority of the beneficiaries were his close friends and PPP supporters. By licensing party stalwarts, and refusing the applications of otherwise affiliated applicants, the PPP thus ensured the continuation of its stranglehold of the airwaves, and with that extinguished any hope of democratic governance under their rule.

The PPP has demonstrated a shrewd understanding of the power of an independent media, for they have done their best to stamp it out. Additionally, they have consistently displayed an unwillingness to allow viewpoints other than their own. Whereas under President Hoyte Stabroek News came into being, Jagdeo attempted to cripple both Stabroek News and Kaieteur News by withdrawing state-funded advertisements from them. Individuals who dare to criticise the regime are pursued with unrestrained vindictiveness. In the past this has resulted in the jailing of a teenager for harmlessly expressing his contempt for Jagdeo, the dismissal of Freddie Kissoon from UG, and an embargo on airing anti-government calypsos. During his tenure Jagdeo banned a journalist from entering the Office of the President, suspended the operations of television stations, and even wrote to the World Bank, CARICOM and foreign universities to demand that critics be fired. Like a grotesque Orwellian fictionalised world, or Eastern Europe before 1989, in Guyana under the PPP open dissent carries a high price. It was in keeping with this dictatorial behaviour that the PPP refused to issue radio broadcast licences for two decades.

The fact that Jagdeo seized for himself the power to award licences is itself an indication of his contempt for the rule of law. The most conservative definitions of this concept are that it eschews wide, discretionary powers, that all are subject to the law, and that reasonableness and fairness prevail against the arbitrary exercise of power. Jagdeo’s awards savagely undermine all of these elements. Since legislation governing the issue of radio licences was in existence by November 2011, a head of state committed to the rule of law ought to have ensured that the Act was brought into force and the Broadcasting Authority constituted, instead of dealing with applications in his personal discretion.

Jagdeo’s decision to issue licences in November 2011 was compounded by the fact that he was then about to demit office. In functioning democracies it is not customary for departing officials to make major policy decisions, particularly if doing so would be to foist significant financial burdens on their successors. More troubling, having refused for so many years to open up the spectrum, what was the justification for not waiting on the legislation to be brought into effect? Jagdeo’s haste to issue licences on the eve of his departure raises grave suspicion as to his motives for so doing.

A clue as to the need for haste is possibly that under the legislation, systems and procedures are substituted for personal discretion. The Act creates a Broadcasting Authority (the GNBA) which is tasked with determining all applications, and in so doing the GNBA must consider a wide range of matters. These include technical standards, proposed programming, the demands of the market, and even the views of stakeholders ventilated at public hearings in the location of an applicant’s proposed operations. All these factors, the law mandates, must be considered against the national broadcasting policy. So it must be asked, did Jagdeo take any of these factors into account when he bypassed the legislation? What criteria guided his decision? How did applicants satisfy him of their technical competence? Did public consultations precede his decision, as contemplated under the Act? In other words, did Jagdeo heed the spirit of the law, even though it had not yet been brought into force?

Despite Jagdeo’s departure, contempt for the rule of law is as strong as ever within the PPP, for last February approval was granted to China Central TV to broadcast here, without the involvement of the GNBA which by then had been finally set up. When questioned about this decision, Roger Luncheon crudely boasted that as head of the Presidential Secretariat, he could “instruct” GNBA to issue a licence (SN, 16/2/2013). The rule of law means that where the law sets out a procedure to be followed, no official – however high – can bypass those procedures or instruct that the law be bypassed to benefit a favoured applicant. Not only must law take precedence over arbitrary discretion, but laws must apply to all persons equally. That Luncheon could so insouciantly admit that the HPS in Guyana has the power to instruct a statutory authority to break the law is a frightening indication of how untouchable the PPP regards itself, for they have abandoned even the pretence of democratic governance.

In addition to the highly irregular procedures surrounding the awards, the actual beneficiaries of Jagdeo’s discretion unmask the levels of nepotism under the PPP administration. Of the 21 frequencies doled out in secrecy – 15 were given to just three persons in the bowels of the PPP: Bobby Ramroop, Dharamkumar Seeraj, and Omkar Lochan.

Over the last decade, millions of taxpayers’ dollars have been channelled to Bobby Ramroop through various schemes: the single-sourcing of drugs in breach of the Public Procurement Act 2003, payment in advance for drugs against normal business protocols (in other words, the taxpayers financed Ramroop’s buying and selling operations), financing for the Berbice river bridge (whereby he loaned money for the bridge at 9-11% interest, all tax-free), and illegal tax free concessions for his business group which were hastily legalised retroactively after being exposed. This radio licence is just another in a string of benefits that Jagdeo has heaped upon his close friend.

Another beneficiary, Dharamkumar Seeraj, is the publisher of the PPP newspaper and a PPP Member of Parliament. A third, Omkar Lochan, is a senior public servant who is also the spokesperson for a company named Telecor, of which one Director is Jagdeo’s niece and another is Robert Persaud’s sister. A host of questions swirl around the award to Telecor/Omkar Lochan. Have we abandoned in Guyana all pretence at having an independent and professional civil service? How did a public servant acquire the means to satisfy Jagdeo that he is financially a fit and proper person to run the operations of the station? Are Lochan’s official responsibilities going to take second fiddle to running Telecor’s operations, or is he simply a front for someone else?

The spectrum is a national resource – limited, highly lucrative, and the patrimony of all Guyanese. Broadcast licences should therefore have been awarded equitably and with the aim of deriving the maximum financial returns. Instead, what occurred here was that the lion’s share of the spectrum pie was gobbled up by Jagdeo’s family and close friends.

Finally, the racial bias in the licences awarded by Jagdeo is unmistakable. While the majority of frequencies were awarded to East Indians, non-Indian Guyanese – including those like Tony Vieira and Enrico Woolford who are household names in journalism – could not even get a response to their applications. Consider also how the PPP refused to allow any private radio station to operate in Linden, a primarily Afro-Guyanese town, for more than two decades.

This is all part of the ethnic triumphalism of the PPP, whereby East Indians are the prime beneficiaries of national resources and public office. Class is at work here as well. Working and middle class East Indians are favoured only to the extent needed to try to secure their loyalty; the real plan is an obscene consolidation of economic and political control in the hands of a small cabal. Government’s largest spending is funnelled to that cabal – for example, in the area of construction works, the bulk goes to Tiwari, who was able to boast on his company’s website that it is in “complete control of sea defence and boulder works”. For buying and selling pharmaceutical drugs, as pointed out, millions have been lavished on Ramroop. The heads of almost every major public office are all of Indian descent – the long list includes the revenue collection, elections commission, forestry, lands and surveys, energy, labour, drainage and irrigation, health, CANU, television, civil aviation. Guyanese of Indian descent have been installed as the heads of all major public commercial entities (like Guysuco and NICIL) and key public entities, including the Public Service, Police Service, Judicial Services, Teaching Services, Police Complaints Authority, Public Utilities Commission… and the list goes on and on ad nauseam. Not to forget, of course, the newly established but apparently toothless GNBA.

In a country that is multi-racial – in primary school we are taught that Guyana has six races – it boggles the mind that Guyanese of one race alone occupy these key positions. One would think that such blatant favouritism is indefensible, but when it emerged in court in 2011 that every single Ambassador then was of Indian descent, Roger Luncheon – a token Black in the inner circle – stated in court that Blacks are not qualified to hold the post of Ambassador.

Incredibly, in response to the justified public outrage over these licences and calls to revoke them, Bibi Shadick – head of GNBA – stated that she would not be “bullied”. What an unfortunate response. A thoughtful chairperson would have considered the dictates of the Broadcasting Act, which articulates a broadcasting policy for Guyana that “safeguards ethnic diversity”, “reflects the multi-racial nature of Guyanese society”, and “promotes shared national values” and “impartiality”. He or she might have considered the furtive nature of Jagdeo’s awards along with their discriminatory and nepotistic features, and instead of pugnacious rhetoric at least conceded that there were irregularities in the process. But Shadick’s reaction demonstrates why it is important for the PPP to install loyal followers of the status quo to every major board and commission.

In nature, a perfect storm is a meteorological phenomenon of terrible but fleeting consequences. In Guyana, the PPP’s perfect storm of governance has been an unending succession of unnatural, destructive forces: rampant corruption, racial discrimination, constitutional violations, and disregard for the rule of law. It is the ordinary taxpayer who has been bullied by the PPP, not the other way around.

http://www.stabroeknews.com/20.../15/a-perfect-storm/

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Conscience:

Don't hold your breath "Gilbakka".

My political crystal ball is assuring me that Donald Ramotar will cease to be commander-in-chief of the armed forces on May 11.

FM

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